Research led by scientists at the Gladstone Institutes, San
Fransisco, United States has identified the precise chain of molecular
events in the human body that drives the death of most of the immune
system’s CD4 T cells as an HIV infection leads to AIDS. Further, they
have identified an existing anti-inflammatory drug that in laboratory
tests blocks the death of these cells — and now are planning a Phase 2
clinical trial to determine if this drug or a similar drug can prevent
HIV-infected people from developing AIDS and related conditions.
Two separate journal articles, published simultaneously in Nature and
Science, detail the research from the laboratory of Warner C. Greene,
MD, PhD, who directs virology and immunology research at Gladstone, an
independent biomedical-research non-profit. His laboratory’s science
paper reveals how, during an HIV infection, a protein known as IFI16
senses fragments of HIV DNA in abortively infected immune cells. This
triggers the activation of the human enzyme caspase-1 and leads to
pyroptosis, a fiery and highly inflammatory form of cell death. As
revealed in the Nature paper, this repetitive cycle of abortive
infection,
cell death, inflammation and recruitment of additional CD4 T
cells to the infection “hot zone” ultimately destroys the immune system
and causes AIDS. The Nature paper further describes laboratory tests in
which an existing anti-inflammatory inhibits caspase-1, thereby
preventing pyroptosis and breaking the cycle of cell death and
inflammation.
“Gladstone has made two important discoveries, first by showing how
the body’s own immune response to HIV causes CD4 T cell death via a
pathway triggering inflammation, and secondly by identifying the host
DNA sensor that detects the viral DNA and triggers this death response,”
said Robert F. Siliciano, MD, PhD, a professor of Medicine at Johns
Hopkins University, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.
“This one-two punch of discoveries underscores the critical value of
basic science — by uncovering the major cause of CD4 T cell depletion in
AIDS. Dr Greene’s laboratory has been able to identify a potential new
therapy for blocking the disease’s progression and improving on current
antiretroviral medications.”
The research comes at a critical time, as so-called AIDS fatigue
leads many to think that HIV/AIDS is solved. In fact, HIV infected an
additional 2.3 million people last year, according to UNAIDS estimates,
bringing the global total of HIV-positive people to 35.3 million.
Antiretroviral medications (ARVs) can prevent HIV infections from
causing AIDS, but they do not cure AIDS. Further, those taking ARVs risk
both a latent version of the virus, which can rebound if ARVs are
discontinued, and the premature onset of diseases that normally occur in
aging populations. Plus, some 16 million people who carry the virus do
not have access to ARVs, according to World Health Organization
estimates.
Seeking solutions for all these challenges, the new Gladstone
discovery builds on earlier research from Dr. Greene’s lab, published in
Cell in 2010. This study showed how HIV attempts, but fails, to
productively infect most of the immune system’s CD4 T cells. In an
attempt to protect the body from the spreading virus, these immune cells
then commit “cellular suicide,” leading to the collapse of the immune
system — and AIDS.
After that research, the Gladstone scientists began to look for ways
to prevent this process by studying exactly how the suicidal response is
initiated. Working in the laboratory with human spleen and tonsil
tissue, as well as lymph-node tissue from HIV-infected patients, the
researchers found that these so-called abortive infections leave
fragments of HIV’s DNA in the immune cells. As described in Nature,
pyroptosis ensues as immune cells rupture and release inflammatory
signals that attract still more cells to repeat the death cycle.
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